NASA's Curiosity Rover Celebrates One Year On Mars
An anonymous reader writes "The Curiosity rover celebrates one year on Mars today. 'The 1-ton robot has achieved a great deal in its 12 months on Mars, discovering an ancient streambed and gathering enough evidence for mission scientists to declare that the planet could have supported microbial life billions of years ago. And more big finds could be in the offing, as Curiosity is now trekking toward its ultimate science destination: the foothills of a huge and mysterious mountain that preserves, in its many layers, a history of Mars' changing environmental conditions.'"
And your puny terrestrial years! Curiosity has some time (322 of your weak days, or a mere 313 of our superior Martian sols) before it reaches its first Martian birthday.
And, since it is now on Mars, that is clearly the birthday that counts.
Opportunity River has been around for almost 10 (Earth) years there..
Correction,
The NASA budget i said was for 2010.
2012's NASA budget was 17.770 billion, which is less than half of a percent of the federal budget.
We spend more on Pizza as a nation and you're asking about priorities? Seriously, the Curiosity budget works out to about $1 per person per year in the U.S.
relativistic effects of Mars' orbital speed on time passage there : 0.9999999965976668868826947934
relativistic effects of Earth's orbital speed on time passage here : 0.99999999506624037797369889211
Difference between the two : 1.531426508853249e-9
So, a bit less than one second difference every twenty years.
So yep...
"I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"